7/30/2006

Attack Of The Killer Tomatoes

Uncle AndrewUncle Andrew
Filed under: @ 8:42 am

It’s been a heck of a growing season so far.

I’m not a gardener and I don’t play one on TV. (If I could play one in a video game I might give it a whirl, particularly if my plants had a tendency to uproot themselves and come after me brandishing hideous green lianas covered in razor-sharp thorns. Ooo oo, and rocket launchers.) My favorite landscaping foliage is concrete, my favorite piece of lawn art is a gas grill. Nature Boy I am not. Fortunately, Margaret is, and she takes full advantage of the scary-huge garden space that came with our place.

This year has been exceptional. The brutally hot kick-off to Summer may have had something to do with it, but our plants—particularly the tomatoes and the sunflowers—have been growing like gangbusters.

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Our sunflowers are usually this stately, but not this early. I can’t wait to fail to see the look on Anastatia’s face when she goes out to the garden (she went out to say goodbye to it before she left with her dad on a trip to San Fran—God, what a cute kid) and immediately gets lost in the sunflower forest. Maybe we ought to put a gingerbread house somewhere in the middle. 😛

The tomatoes are another matter. We have never in our lives had tomato plants this tall, this beefy, this, well, frightening.

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They suck up their entire—what, two, three gallon?—reservoir of water every damn day. They are tall enough to peek through our bedroom window, and late at night they mutter ominous things about wanting midnight snacks and how if we don’t make with the fish-meal smoothies we’d better sleep with one eye open. These things are huge. I keep wondering what the hell we’re going to do with the plants once Autumn gets here. Firewood, maybe? Anyone looking to build a garden shed or something, see me before you shell out for lumber.

This brings me to my actual reason for writing this post, a book recommendation. If you have any interest whatsoever in gardening or are close to someone who does, I highly recommend The $64 Tomato by Willliam Alexander.

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It’s the stirring—okay, not really—account of an IT manager and his physician wife’s efforts to turn their rambling three-acre suburban New York backyard into a proper English-style vegetable garden and orchard. Ya-hoo!

If just about anyone else had written this book, it would be exactly as precious, as prissy and self-absorbed, that is to say as pathetically yuppie as it initially sounds. Oh, the trials and tribulations of having the massive income and copious spare time necessary to hire someone to fully landscape the back yard of your beautifully restored colonial damn-near-mansion! The deer, the webworms, the tomato blossom end-rot! Can’t you just hear the strains of “Nobody Knows The Trouble I’ve Seen” on the wind as it whispers through the struggling apple trees of the fruit orchard? Pfleh.

But Alexander writes with such dry humor, such warm and self-directed irony, that what could have been a massively masturbatory missive by a member of the misproportionately moneyed menschosphere turns out instead to be quite charming and absorbing. His epic battles with the wily apple maggot, an insanely clever groundhog he dubs Superchuck, and the physical toll that being a “gentleman farmer” takes on his middle-aged information-technology-crafted body are engaging and fun to read. You really feel for him, particularly because he is so obviously aware that he has brought it all on himself.

This book is a great afternoon read, just perfect for a sunny day when you are trying to find something to do to avoid going out and weeding the bean patch. 😉

5 Responses to “Attack Of The Killer Tomatoes”

  1. Dalek Says:

    I hear you – my allegedly 4-foot variety of sunflowers are pushing 7-8 feet, some of them. And I just harvested 45 heads of garlic out of my garden on Saturday, several weeks ahead of normal.

    And yes, when I lived in San Diego, I wound up with a 12-15 foot cherry tomato plant (seriously, the thing grew up into the lower branches of the fig tree!). Tomatoes REALLY like the heat, and if you give them plenty of water and fresh nice dirt with lots of compost and the occasional fish-food smoothie…watch out!

    I’m rather glad I didn’t plant tomatoes this year – I can’t eat them anyway, and there’s no way fisherbear could have kept up with them.

  2. Val Says:

    Lookit that Margaret! As always, outstanding in her field.

  3. Uncle Andrew Says:

    Oh, barf…. 😀

  4. Uncle Andrew Says:

    I’m rather glad I didn’t plant tomatoes this year – I can’t eat them anyway, and there’s no way fisherbear could have kept up with them.

    We’re going to be overrun as well, but that’s what the GardenMaster 1000 Food Dehydrator is for: homemade sun-dried tomatoes kick ass. 🙂

  5. Margaret Says:

    Now technically the tomatoes aren’t sucking up their ENTIRE 3 gallon reservior per day, but they’ll go through at least half of it every day. I do have to top off the reservoirs on the planters every day to keep the plants happy, they’ll get all wilty if I let them go for more than 24 hours.

    I harvested our *very first* ripe tomato on the 26th of July. My father says I could be convicted of witchcraft for my tomato plants this year.

    I can’t wait until the cucumbers start to bloom! 🙂

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